The 1960s produced a pair of classic songs
about the need for solitude in one"s own special
place. Brian Wilson was able to tell his secrets "In
My Room,' a lovely tune that is justly famous. In
1969 another song explored this theme, but it was never
quite so well known. This song, a kind of clueless cousin
to Wilson"s hit, is "My Bathroom Is A Private
Kind Of Place.' It"s from the "The Bathrooms
Are Coming,' an industrial-show musical produced
for the American Standard Company to extol the glories
of their wonderful plumbing fixtures. Despite the unpromising
subject matter, the song was surprisingly well done with
a sophisticated arrangement, excellent production and
recording, and a Broadway-quality performance. Best of
all, it has touchingly earnest lyrics about that magical
place, the bathroom. "The only place where I can
stay making faces at my face My bathroom, my bathroom
is much more than it may seem, where I wash and where
I cream, a special place where I can stay, and cream,
and dream I'm free, I'm free " In our
Age of Irony it"s hard to imagine anyone singing
those lines with a straight face but the singer, whoever
she is, gives a heroic performance, sounding as if she
really means it. Maybe she did. Actually, come to think
of it, I believe I"ll go take a nice long soak in
the tub now.

- Palomino Royalle

TT-3:11 / 3.7MB / 160kbps 44.1khz

Jonathan Ward writes:
What a classic - Palomino is right. Truly one of the most
amazing industrial musicals out there, and worth searching
out as "My Bathroom" is just one standout cut.
The whole shebang was written by an industrial show veteran
named Sid Siegel, who wrote many other shows, including
ones for Standard Oil and Encyclopedia Brittanica. The
notes on the jacket are worth quoting in full:

"The Bathrooms Are Coming premiered a new decade
of bathroom fixtures born out of exhaustive human and
product research by American-Standard. The story began
with the introduction of a mythical Greek goddess Femma,
the epitome of all women's attitudes, reflections and
desires and the leader of all women's movements. In
the play Femma is called upon by other women to start
a bathroom revolution - "Join the fight for bathroom
safety, Femma...the fight for beauty and luxury. We
need freedom from bathroom oppression. Join the fight
for better bathrooms."

And so it was that Femma led the story. It began with
a declaration that "plumbing" is a feminine
business, showing a profile of the "woman of the
70s", and the case for change against the status
quo. She carried the audience through the Cornell research,
to a view of markets in terms of people. Then, the Revolution
unfolded in terms of new attitudes, new programs. Then
one by one, the real stars of the show were revealed
- Economy Wall Surround, Proximatics, Ultra Bath, Bone
and Spectra 70."

Stormy Hunter writes:
This selection certainly brings a smile and a chuckle.
About thirty years ago, my cousin Phil (who was about
4 years old at the time) was with his mother in a department
store. He kept tugging her sleeve and saying "I have
to go to the bathroom!" Upon verifying that little
Phil knew where it was, she sent him to go by himself.
About ten minutes later, a very angry store manager broke
the news to mom. Phil had used one of the display toilets!